[From the article: McAfee (NASDAQ:INTC) today released the results of a new
global study, revealing that consumers place an average value of $37,438 on the
“digital assets” they own across multiple digital devices, yet more than a
third lack protection across all of those devices. In the U.S., people valued
their assets at a higher figure than anywhere else, at nearly $55,000. …“Most
parents wouldn’t dream of leaving a stack of their child’s photos, their family
bank statements, online passwords and other personal information just lying
around for strangers to sift through,” said Jennifer Jolly, consumer technology
expert. “But that’s what you’re risking when you walk around with unprotected
smartphones, tablets and other digital devices. Your digital assets are
precious, why wouldn’t you safeguard them?”]
Tech Journal South

Research
firm MSI International surveyed more than 3,000 consumers in 10 countries about
the financial value they would assign to digital assets such as photo libraries … consumer technology expert. “But
that’s what …FierceWireless

[From the article: The eight-month-old startup [CPUsage, http://www.cpusage.com] wants to pay folks so
it can harness their idle compute time to sell to corporations. CEO and
Co-Founder Jeff Martens estimates an average user donating four hours of
compute time every day could score about $10 a month. Martens and his two other
co-founders want to turn their Portland, Ore.-based startup into the
Folding@home or SETI@home of the for-profit world. The goal is to enroll users
and use their computers to help corporate customers (the startup already has
two) speed up their analysis jobs. The company’s software breaks up a job into
bits and sends those bits to the user’s computer for parallel processing. One
customer uses the service for decoding agricultural DNA. Martens knows it’s not
right for all jobs, as latency is high and there might be security concerns.]

[From the article: BookStats,
a comprehensive survey conducted by two major trade groups that was released
early Tuesday, revealed that in 2010 publishers generated net revenue of $27.9
billion, a 5.6 percent increase over 2008. Publishers sold 2.57 billion books
in all formats in 2010, a 4.1 percent increase since 2008. …We’re seeing a
resurgence, and we’re seeing it across all markets — trade, academic,
professional,” said Tina Jordan, the vice president of the Association
of American Publishers. “In each category we’re seeing growth. The
printed word is alive and well whether it takes a paper delivery or digital
delivery]

[From the article: Based on our experience, and because the preservation process of a digital object starts at its creation, here are some suggestions for web developers that can help ensure that the websites they create and maintain will be easier to crawl, can remain accessible, and will be preserved.]